Greetings!
Posted: Sun Nov 18, 2012 9:40 pm
Hi everyone -
I've posted a couple times, and realized I probably should follow protocol and introduce myself formally. I'm a professor of physics from a small liberal arts college in Iowa (Luther College, Decorah, IA) and am spending the year on sabbatical at Pacific Northwest National Laboratories in Richland, WA. In addition to my teaching I do research in particle physics, working on experiments at Cornell University in New York and at KEK, the national high energy physics laboratory of Japan, located north of Tokyo in Tsukuba, Ibaraki prefecture. My involvement with the experiment in Japan, starting a couple years ago, brought me back to an old interest in go - and I'm "re-starting" my playing. My wife and I have four daughters, and all of them have expressed some interest in learning the game, and so not only am I refreshing my own memory, but I'm hoping to teach a few of them all that I know and more.
Cheers,
Todd
I've posted a couple times, and realized I probably should follow protocol and introduce myself formally. I'm a professor of physics from a small liberal arts college in Iowa (Luther College, Decorah, IA) and am spending the year on sabbatical at Pacific Northwest National Laboratories in Richland, WA. In addition to my teaching I do research in particle physics, working on experiments at Cornell University in New York and at KEK, the national high energy physics laboratory of Japan, located north of Tokyo in Tsukuba, Ibaraki prefecture. My involvement with the experiment in Japan, starting a couple years ago, brought me back to an old interest in go - and I'm "re-starting" my playing. My wife and I have four daughters, and all of them have expressed some interest in learning the game, and so not only am I refreshing my own memory, but I'm hoping to teach a few of them all that I know and more.
Cheers,
Todd